The Satanic Temple is working to get a 7-foot-tall goat-headed demon statue at the Oklahoma Statehouse.

The Satanic Temple is working to get a 7-foot-tall goat-headed demon statue at the Oklahoma Statehouse.

Adrienne Cutway, Orlando Sentinel

The same group that is upset that its diorama was banned in Tallahassee is now working to have a statue of a goat-headed demon with children at its feet erected at the Oklahoma Statehouse, according to WWMT.com.

The Satanic Temple, a group based in New York, wants the statue to be displayed next to the Ten Commandments monument already present at the Statehouse.

Nearly $17,000 has been pledged toward the cause on the group's Indiegogo page, with the end goal being $20,000 by Jan. 17.

"The statue will serve as a beacon calling for compassion and empathy among all living creatures," spokesman Lucien Greaves told RawStory.com. "The statue will also have a functional purpose as a chair where people of all ages may sit on the lap of Satan for inspiration and contemplation.”

On Monday the group unveiled the design of the statue, which features a Baphomet -- a winged figure with a goat head and hooves -- sitting cross-legged on a large stone chair with two children smiling near its lap.

Carved above the Baphomet is a pentacle and on the statue there will also be quotes from poets Lord Byron and William Blake, according to Raw Story.

In Florida, The Satanic Temple's dioroma of an angel falling into the fiery pits of hell was deemed "grossly offensive" and rejected as part of the holiday display at the Capitol. The group is still deciding whether or not to take legal action, according to the Orlando Sentinel.